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Dive into the research topics where Henna Kupiainen is active.

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Featured researches published by Henna Kupiainen.


Journal of Asthma | 2011

Overlap Syndrome of Asthma and COPD Predicts Low Quality of Life

Paula Kauppi; Henna Kupiainen; Ari Lindqvist; Lauri Tammilehto; Maritta Kilpeläinen; Vuokko L. Kinnula; Tari Haahtela; Tarja Laitinen

Background. In clinical practice, patients whose airway disease shares features of both asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) remain poorly recognized. Material and methods. The study population consisted of 1546 patients with a diagnosis of asthma or COPD or both. Based on patient-reported outcomes and retrospective medical record data, the study population was divided into three groups: (1) asthma only, (2) COPD only, and (3) both asthma and COPD (overlap syndrome group). We evaluated patient characteristics associated with health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Results. In many respects, the overlap group fell between the asthma and COPD groups. In the overlap group, however, HRQoL was the poorest of all. In the logistic regression model, with the asthma group as the reference, both the overlap and the COPD group showed higher risk for low HRQoL [odd ratio (OR): 1.9; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.2–3.2; and OR: 1.8, 95% CI: 1.0–3.2; respectively]. In addition, female gender, obesity, duration of disease, disability pension, and coexisting cardiovascular disease were associated with low HRQoL across the study population. Conclusions. Patients with overlapping asthma and COPD differed from those patients with asthma or COPD only. Overlap syndrome was associated with low HRQoL.


International Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease | 2012

Physical inactivity in COPD and increased patient perception of dyspnea

Milla Katajisto; Henna Kupiainen; Piritta Rantanen; Ari Lindqvist; Maritta Kilpeläinen; Heikki Tikkanen; Tarja Laitinen

Objective: To study patients’ levels of exercise activity and the clinical characteristics that relate to physical activity and inactivity among patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Methods: A postal questionnaire was administered to 719 patients with COPD in 2010; patients were recruited from the Helsinki and Turku University Central Hospitals in Finland and have been followed since 2005. The questionnaire asked participants about their exercise routines and other daily activities, potential restrictions to exercise, health-related quality of life, and subjective sensations of dyspnea upon exertion. Results: A total of 50% of the participants reported exercising > 2 times a week throughout the year. The proportion of the exercise inactive patients increased in parallel with disease progression, but the participants exhibited great variation in the degree of activity as well as in sport choices. Year-round activity was better maintained among patients who exercised both indoors and outdoors. Training activity was significantly correlated with patients’ reported subjective dyspnea (r = 0.32, P < 0.001), health-related quality of life (r = 0.25, P < 0.001), mobility score (r = 0.37, P < 0.001), and bronchial obstruction (r = 0.18, P < 0.001). Active patients did not differ from inactive patients in terms of sex, age, smoking status, somatic comorbidities, or body mass index. Irrespective of the level of severity of patients’ COPD, the most significant barrier to exercising was the subjective sensation of dyspnea. Conclusion: When a patient with COPD suffers from dyspnea and does not have regular exercise routines, the patient will most likely benefit from an exercise program tailored to his or her physical capabilities.


COPD: Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease | 2009

Real-world clinical data identifies gender-related profiles in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Tarja Laitinen; U. Hodgson; Henna Kupiainen; L. Tammilehto; T. Haahtela; Maritta Kilpeläinen; Ari Lindqvist; Vuokko L. Kinnula

This study aims to compare diagnostic and clinical outcomes of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) from the gender perspective using retrospective health care data and patient reported outcomes in a real-world setting. An electronic database was constructed from complete medical records of 844 COPD patients who were recruited in Helsinki and Turku University Central Hospitals during the years 2005—07. The patients were identified from the hospital discharge registries by ICD10 code J44.8 in the age group of 18–75 years of age. The medical history was obtained from all healthcare providers who had treated these patients during the previous 5-10 years; the study intends to continue their follow-up annually for the next 10 years. Thirty-six percent (N = 266) of the participants were women. The COPD diagnosis had been made at the same age for both genders. Women, however, reported significantly less pack-years than men. Compared to the men, the women displayed less advanced airway obstruction, but more severe gas transfer impairment. Parenchymal damage when evaluated by diffusion capacity correlated significantly stronger with FEV1 (% of predicted) in women than men. The BMI index of the women was lower than that of the men. Cardiovascular diseases, diabetes and alcoholism were significantly more common in men, but women suffered more psychiatric conditions, especially depression. This cohort showed several significant gender dependent differences in the clinical presentation that need to taken under consideration in the assessment of COPD progression and the disease management.


Health and Quality of Life Outcomes | 2011

Comparison between the disease-specific Airways Questionnaire 20 and the generic 15D instruments in COPD

Witold Mazur; Henna Kupiainen; Janne Pitkäniemi; Maritta Kilpeläinen; Harri Sintonen; Ari Lindqvist; Vuokko L. Kinnula; Tarja Laitinen

BackgroundGiven that the assessment of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) is an essential outcome measure to optimize chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patient management, there is a need for a short and fast, reliable and valid instrument for routine use in clinical practice. The objective of this study was to analyse the relationship between the disease-specific Airways questionnaire (AQ20) and the generic 15D health-related quality of life (HRQoL) instrument simultaneously in a large cohort of patients with COPD. We also compare the HRQoL of COPD patients with that of the general population.MethodsThe AQ20 and 15D were administered to 739 COPD patients representing an unselected hospital-based COPD population. The completion rates and validity of, and correlations among the questions and dimension scores were examined. A factor analysis with varimax rotation was performed in order to find subsets of highly correlating items of the questionnaires.ResultsThe summary scores of AQ20 and 15D were highly correlated (r = - 0.71, p < 0.01). In AQ20 over 50% of patients reported frequent cough, breathlessness during domestic work, and chest problem limiting their full enjoyment of life. 15D results showed a noteworthy decrease of HRQoL in breathing, mobility, sleeping, usual activities, discomfort and symptoms, vitality, and sexual activity (scores ≤ 0.75). Compared to the age- and gender-standardized Finnish general population, the COPD patients were statistically significantly worse off on 13 of 15 dimensions.ConclusionsThe AQ20 and 15D summary scores are comparable in terms of measuring HRQoL in COPD patients. The data support the validity of 15D to measure the quality of life in COPD. COPD compromises the HRQoL broadly, as reflected by the generic instrument. Both questionnaires are simple and short, and could easily be used in clinical practice with high completion rates.


Respiratory Medicine | 2014

Longitudinal HRQoL shows divergent trends and identifies constant decliners in asthma and COPD

Jukka Koskela; Henna Kupiainen; Maritta Kilpeläinen; Ari Lindqvist; Harri Sintonen; Janne Pitkäniemi; Tarja Laitinen

BACKGROUND/AIM Monitoring of lung function alone does not adequately identify the high-risk patients among elderly asthma and COPD cohorts. The additional value of Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) development in the detection of patients with a disabling disease in clinical practice is unclear. The aim of this study was to statistically examine the individual development of HRQoL measured using respiratory-specific AQ20 and generic 15D questionnaires. MATERIALS AND METHODS The HRQoL of COPD (N = 739) and asthma (N = 1329) patients was evaluated at 0, 1, 2, and 4 years after recruitment. To determine a five-year HRQoL change for each patient we used mixed-effects modelling for linear trend. RESULTS In COPD, the majority (60-80%) of the individuals showed declining trend, whereas in asthma, the majority (46-71%) showed no attenuation in HRQoL. The proportion of constant decliners was estimated higher with the 15D both in asthma (6.3%) and COPD (6.3%) than with AQ20 (3.5 and 4.5%, respectively). The first measurement of HRQoL was found to predict future development of HRQoL. In asthma, obesity-related diseases such as hypertension, diabetes and gastro-esophageal reflux disease best explained the decline, whereas in COPD, age and the level of bronchial obstruction were the main determinants. CONCLUSION Based on the five-year follow-up, the HRQoL trends significantly diverging from each other could be identified both among the asthma and COPD patients. Compared to cross-sectional HRQoL, the HRQoL trend over a clinically relevant period of time allows us to ignore, to a great extent, the random error of self-assessed HRQoL and thus, it may offer a more accurate measure to describe the disease process.


COPD: Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease | 2016

CHRNA5/CHRNA3 Locus Associates with Increased Mortality among Smokers

Henna Kupiainen; Mikko Kuokkanen; Jukka Kontto; Jarmo Virtamo; Veikko Salomaa; Ari Lindqvist; Maritta Kilpeläinen; Tarja Laitinen

Abstract Polymorphisms in the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor gene (CHRNA5/CHRNA3 locus) have been associated with several smoking related traits such as nicotine dependence, cigarette consumption, smoking cessation, lung cancer, and COPD. The aim of this candidate gene study was to study the locus among the Finnish COPD patients and long-term smokers with regard to COPD risk, smoking behavior, cancer, and all-cause mortality. Genotyping of rs1051730, the locus tagging SNP was done in two longitudinal cohorts: Finnish COPD patients (N = 575, 74% men) and long-term smokers, all men (N = 1911). Finnish population sample (N = 1730) was used as controls. The analyses were done using logistic and Cox regression. The main findings were that the minor allele increased the risk of COPD when compared to the Finnish population at large (OR = 1.4, 95% CI 1.2-1.7, p = 3.2 × 10-5). Homozygosity for the risk allele was associated in both cohorts with all-cause mortality (crude HR 2.2, 95% CI 1.2–3.8 and 1.3, 95% CI 1.1–1.5, respectively), with any type of cancer (crude OR 2.3, 95% CI 1.0–5.1) among the COPD patients and with the number of pack-years (crude OR 1.4, 95% CI 1.1–1.9) among the male smokers. CHRNA5/CHRNA3 locus tagged by rs1051730, which has been previously associated with several smoking related diseases was now shown to be associated also with increased all-cause mortality among long-term smokers with or without clinical COPD further emphasizing the clinical importance of the finding.


BMC Pulmonary Medicine | 2014

Co-morbidities are the key nominators of the health related quality of life in mild and moderate COPD

Jukka Koskela; Maritta Kilpeläinen; Henna Kupiainen; Witold Mazur; Harri Sintonen; Marike Boezen; Ari Lindqvist; Dirkje S. Postma; Tarja Laitinen


BMC Pulmonary Medicine | 2014

Long-term smoking increases the need for acute care among asthma patients: a case control study

Paula Kauppi; Henna Kupiainen; Ari Lindqvist; Tari Haahtela; Tarja Laitinen


Pulmonary Medicine | 2012

Successful Smoking Cessation in COPD: Association with Comorbidities and Mortality

Henna Kupiainen; V L Kinnula; Ari Lindqvist; Dirkje S. Postma; Hendrika Boezen; Tarja Laitinen; Maritta Kilpeläinen


European Respiratory Journal | 2013

Genetic variant of the nicotinic receptor gene and the long term prognosis of smokers

Henna Kupiainen; Mikko Kuokkanen; Jukka Kontto; Veikko Salomaa; Jarmo Virtamo; Ingileif Jonsdottir; Tarja Laitinen

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Tarja Laitinen

Turku University Hospital

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Ari Lindqvist

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Maritta Kilpeläinen

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Tari Haahtela

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Heikki Tikkanen

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Jarmo Virtamo

National Institute for Health and Welfare

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